Posts Tagged ‘change congress’

Naomi Klein on the Corrupting Influence of $$$ (x-post from C-C)

Thursday, December 18th, 2008

Naomi Klein, activist and author of No Logo, has a great series of 1 minute videos on BigThink.com. In one she addresses the corrupting influence of corporate money in politics:

“I think there needs to be a citizen’s revolt against the corporate takeover of politics… Americans are in an endless election campaign. It never ends. So the idea that after the election then there will be policy, there is no after the election. There is always another election, another fundraising campaign, and you know it never ends.”

Klein also highlights the critical importance of campaign finance reform: “Before this can actually lead to political change, we need to change the rules. We need to get corporate money the hell away from politics; or at least a huge separation. It has to . . . It’s the most pressing issue of our time. It’s the most pressing issue of our time because it’s what needs to happen before anything else can happen.”

We’re advocating the same thing.

Money is not the only problem but it’s the problem that must be fixed first. The time is ripe and with your help we will create the change that we need.

Senate Seat for Sale

Tuesday, December 9th, 2008

Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich has been arrested and charged with corruption. Initial signs are appallingly bad.

Wiretap recordings indicate that Blagojevich was actively working to sell or trade Obama’s old seat in the Senate to the highest bidder, “I’m going to keep this Senate option for me a real possibility, you know, and therefore I can drive a hard bargain. You hear what I’m saying. And if I don’t get what I want and I’m not satisfied with it, then I’ll just take the Senate seat myself.”

Wow.

In exchange for the Senate seat Blagojevich asked for “a substantial salary” at a non-profit or labor union for himself, substantial meaning $250,000 to $300,000 a year. For his wife he sought memberships on corporate boards that would amount to $150,000 a year.

Apparently there was at least one candidate engaged in the bidding, “Candidate 5.” Blagojevich said that he received an offer of $500,000 from Candidate 5 in exchange for the seat.

In the very best possible light this evidence looks terrible. Again we appear to have found a politician engaged in the most offensive sort of political corruption. There is a temptation to think that we’ve found just one more bad apple but the truth is that our system is a bad apple factory.

Blagojevich may be one of the worst offenders but his actions are evidence of a more pervasive culture of corruption. A systemic addiction to money. Every political party is afflicted and each politician plays a part.

It is time for the people to raise their voices and insist on change. Blagojevich can become a catalyst for that change – take two minutes to pester your representatives and tell them that you’re mad as hell and not going to take it any more.

(Cross posted from http://change-congress.org/blog/2008/12/09/senate-seat-sale)

Houston we HAVA problem

Thursday, October 2nd, 2008

Problems with Electronic Voting Machings

Recent articles in the Washington Post and New York Times raise concerns about potential electoral problems this November. The areas of concern may sound familiar to Change Congress readers: security of electronic voting machines, lack of an auditable paper trail, voter registration, and voter identification & disenfranchisement. Similar concerns were raised in the run up to the 2004 & 2006 elections. In the aftermath of both the 2004 and 2006 elections there were numerous and significant claims of voter disenfranchisement and voting irregularities. Some went so far as to claim that these irregularities had altered the outcome of the 2004 presidential election. These claims, while never having been fully proven in a court of law or of public opinion, are nonetheless unsettling when considered in the light of the problems that accompanied the 2000 presidential election.

Why is it that we are hearing similar stories eight years later?

Potential answers can be found in the origins of the Help America Vote Act (HAVA). Connecticut Senator Chris Dodd, the chief sponsor of the Senate bill, described HAVA as “the first Civil Rights Act of the 21st century.” HAVA was a response to the election problems of 2000. The explicit goal of HAVA was to fix America’s electoral system by replacing outdated voting systems with newer, more reliable machines and procedures. The act created the Election Assistance Commission to administer Federal elections, to establish a set of election standards and to allocate $3.9 billion to be used for investing in new voting equipment.

Lobbying, Campaign Contributions and Conflicts of Interest

HAVA’s goals were noble but the results have been questionable. Some of the most vilified political figures in recent memory are deeply associated with the creation of the act. Former Ohio Congressman Bob Ney was the chief sponsor of the House bill. Robert F. Kennedy Jr described Ney’s HAVA involvement – “The primary author and steward of HAVA was Rep. Bob Ney, the GOP chairman of the powerful U.S. House Administration Committee. Ney had close ties to the now-disgraced lobbyist Jack Abramoff, whose firm received at least $275,000 from Diebold to lobby for its touch-screen machines. Ney’s former chief of staff, David DiStefano, also worked as a registered lobbyist for Diebold, receiving at least $180,000 from the firm to lobby for HAVA and ‘other election reform issues.’ Ney – who accepted campaign contributions from DiStefano and counted Diebold’s then-CEO O’Dell among his constituents – made sure that HAVA strongly favored the use of the company’s machines.” For the record, both Abramoff and Ney are convicted federal felons as a result of accepting money and gifts in exchange for political favors.

Kennedy also found a series of deep financial and professional ties between lawmakers and voting machine manufacturers. “Diebold, along with its employees and their families, has contributed at least $300,000 to GOP candidates and party funds since 1998.” Additionally, Nebraska Senator Chuck Hagel, who also voted in favor of HAVA, was the former chair of one of the four major voting equipment manufacturers.

Given theses facts, it’s very easy to believe that Diebold and other voting equipment manufacturers gave money to well placed politicians in order to influence legislation that was worth $3.9 billion to their industry.

HAVA Unchanged Since 2002 + Diebold Today

From what I was able to gather from an hour and a half of research on Google, Maplight.org and the Library of Congress site, the Help America Vote Act has not been modified once since its initial passage in 2002. Of the more than 50 HAVA-related bills that have been introduced in the House and Senate since 2002 none have passed.

The Diebold board of directors acted to put an end to all executive level political giving in 2004 stating that Diebold officials “may not make contributions to, directly or indirectly, any political candidate, party, election issue or cause, or participate in any political activities, except for voting.” Despite the ban, Diebold executives continued to give money to Republican campaigns. Since that time Diebold has changed the name of its voting equipment subsidiary to Premier Election Solutions and while executive level campaign contributions appear to have come to an end, state level lobbying efforts continue. In addition to Diebold/Premier, other voting equipment manufacturers have engaged in an aggressive lobbying campaign in order to counter negative public opinion and to win business from states which have been allocated hundreds of millions in HAVA funds.

Saving our Democracy: A Call for Transparency

Given the importance of the issue, the integrity of our democracy, there is a surprising lack of information available on the link between campaign finance, lobbying and the voting records of politicians. The data exists but it’s certainly not easily accessible. Our friends at OpenSecrets and MapLight have been doing a tremendous job of increasing the transparency in politics but neither has data that goes back to 2002 and the HAVA vote. If you have access to useful tools or information related to HAVA, please let us know.

In general our political system and the economy of influence that drives it need to be more open and accessible. Political contributions by PACs, lobbyists and corporations make up a significant proportion of money in politics and we need a more transparent system that will allow us to more easily determine if the drafting of legislation and votes are being traded for cash. There are plenty of tools out there that are being developed for this, including the array that the Sunlight Foundation have been working on. What we need to do is integrate these tools into our daily lives. Sunlight Foundation is collecting comments on the recent federal bailout bill. You can add your own here.

I’ve cross-posted this from Change-Congress.org